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Study in 2 Thessalonians

Study in 2 Thessalonians. Presentation 04. Defeat of Evil Standing Firm Chap 2v8-17. Presentation 04. Introduction.

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Study in 2 Thessalonians

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  1. Study in 2 Thessalonians Presentation 04

  2. Defeat of Evil Standing Firm Chap 2v8-17 Presentation 04

  3. Introduction In our last study we saw the way in which Paul, teaching on the subject of Christ’s second coming, indicated that the event would be preceded by the appearance of a figure called as ‘the man of lawlessness’, an incarnation of evil who in turn would be foreshadowed throughout history by pale mirror images. Men who have been shaped by the principle of lawlessness and who have often been mistaken for the man of lawlessness himself. Presentation 04

  4. Defeat of Evil When we turn to v8 there is no description of a headlong and long drawn out clash between the powers of good and evil. The man of sin is revealed, and immediately consumed. It is the easy victory of Christ that is stressed! The phrase ‘The breath of His mouth’ reminds us of Luther’s great phrase concerning the evil one, ‘A word shall quickly slay him’. It is quite incredible to realise that the forces of evil in the world continue to operate only because so far Christ has not chosen to speak that word, and not because they have succeeded in putting up a stiff and resolute resistance to his Kingdom. Presentation 04

  5. Defeat of Evil Hendriksen, in his commentary on Revelation, says in his exposition of ch.19; “Please observe that the battle itself is not described. This battle of Har-Mageddon is not a protracted struggle with now this and then that side winning. No; ‘with the breath of His mouth’ Christ as His coming defeats the foe. By the ‘manifestation of His presence’ He vanquishes His enemies. We are simply told that the anti-christian forces are gathered together against Christ and His army, and that they are put to nought”. Presentation 04

  6. Defeat of Evil Those of you who are familiar with C.S. Lewis’ ‘The last Battle’ will know that Lewis failed sufficiently to stress the ease with which this battle was won. But this is certainly the force of Paul’s word here. What comfort and confidence this should bring to our hearts, to know that Christ is so sovereignly in control, and to be assured, by implication, that in his ‘interim’ dealings with the powers of evil in our lives, He is just as instant in deliverance. How does the hym-nwriterput it? ‘At times, with sudden glory, He speaks and all is done; Without one stroke of battle the victory is won’. Presentation 04

  7. Defeat of Evil That the man of sin is not Satan himself, but distinguishable from him, is clear from v9, but he is obviously so closely identified with him as to be his ‘incarnation’ in human form. Paul now reverts to a description of this fiendish creature’s activities. It is a fearsome and frightening picture, horrific in its implications. J.B. Phillips renders it ‘armed with all the force, wonders and signs that falsehood can devise’ and goes on to speak of ‘Evil’s undiluted power -to deceive’, but even this graphic rendering hardly does justice to Paul’s meaning. Presentation 04

  8. Defeat of Evil Older commentators point out the blasphemous counterfeit that Satan’s work presents here: the man of sin has a ‘coming’, as Christ has His coming; he works by supernatural power, as Christ worked by the power of God; he works miracles as Christ did. This is all very alarming, and but for one fact might lead us to despair: those who are deceived and thereby perish are those who have v 10b ‘refused to love the truth and so be saved’. Men are not subject to blind forces of fate; moral issues control human destinies, and it is in the first instance a wrong attitude to the truth that ultimately leads to total deception. Presentation 04

  9. Defeat of Evil It is not that they have not heard or known the truth, nor does Paul say so, it is that when they have heard and knew it they did not care for it or love it but refused it. It is a lack of sympathy with the truth that finally condemns men. Cf John 3:19 this is what Jesus said, ‘This is the condemnation, that light is come into the world, and men loved darkness rather than light, because their deeds were evil’. Here, then, are two basic factors in the destruction of men’s souls as described by Denney; “They perish by their own agency, in that they do not welcome and love the truth; and they perish by the malevolence of the devil, who avails himself of this dislike to the truth to befool them by falsehood and lead them ever further and further astray”. Presentation 04

  10. Defeat of Evil Paul then says that God himself is active in this terrible judgment of men. “God”, he says, “sends them strong delusion, that they should believe a lie”. We must not baulk at the solemn implications of these words, for they are corroborated in other parts of Scripture. It is exactly what Paul teaches in Rom. 1:24-28 where three times he states that because men refuse ‘the love of the truth’ God gives them up to a reprobate mind. It is what our Lord Himself said of Jerusalem in Matt .23:v37, 38 as he wept over it, “O Jerusalem...how often I have longed to gather your children together ... but you were not willing. Look your house is left to you desolate..” Presentation 04

  11. Defeat of Evil Notice that this is no arbitrary act of vengeance on God’s part, but something that he does with tears in his eyes, and concerning which he has been left no other option. If men repeatedly refuse his grace and truth, he has no alternative but to leave them to their choice, to a delusion of their own choice and through it a final darkness. If only men could see that this is the final result of resisting the word of the gospel! True indeed it is that no man can listen to the truth and be the same again. It does something to him, for good or ill. To resist it hardens his heart, and blinds his mind until, he becomes incapable of distinguishing between truth and error, right or wrong, good and evil, and his deception is complete. Lord help us that when we hear the truth we may learn to love it, for our salvation. Presentation 04

  12. God’s Grace Paul now speaks in v13-14 of those who do believe the truth and who do receive and love the truth, and his words are all the more striking and impressive against the dark and sombre background of what precedes them. Here, then, is the solid ground of assurance for those who are Christ’s. Salvation is not something initiated by the believer, but is buttressed on all sides by the electing grace of God. From eternity to eternity God is the prime mover in this work, and the life and experience of the believer is set between God’s eternal intention, on the one hand, and His eternal glory, on the other. Presentation 04

  13. God’s Grace From the beginning, from before the foundation of the world, we are chosen in Christ for a destiny of salvation, and it is basic to the whole N.T. understanding of the gospel that the good work of grace begun in us, having its roots in eternity, should continue unhindered until it finally bring us to eternity. The way in which this work is accomplished is expressed in the words “through the sanctifying work of the Spirit and through belief in the truth” v13. The Holy Spirit is the Executive Officer of the Godhead, and applies the finished work of Christ to our hearts, making us participators in his death and Resurrection. Presentation 04

  14. God’s Grace For this he creates faith in us so that we believe the truth [cf Eph. 2:8, Phil. 1v29]; and in the obedience we offer to gospel truth the ongoing work of God’s grace is ensured and sealed in our lives. How different this picture is to the sad and sinister downward movement into darkness recorded in the previous verses! Well might Paul give thanks for the Thessalonians, when so many marks of their election of God were evident in their lives! Presentation 04

  15. Stand Firm The exhortation to stand firm in v15 follows naturally on from the previous verses. We must understand that apart from such a secure and firm basis as the fundamental affirmations of the faith in v13,14 there can be no possibility of standing firm at all in the Christian life, and to ask people to do so is to offer them a counsel of despair. It is because of what God has made us, in Christ and the gospel, that we can be what he has called us to be. This is the heart of everything, and the inspiration of the Christian life, and its impelling, sustaining and comforting power. Presentation 04

  16. Stand Firm The exhortation to stand firm in v15 follows naturally on from the previous verses. We must understand that apart from such a secure and firm basis as the fundamental affirmations of the faith in v13,14 there can be no possibility of standing firm at all in the Christian life, and to ask people to do so is to offer them a counsel of despair. It is because of what God has made us, in Christ and the gospel, that we can be what he has called us to be. This is the heart of everything, and the inspiration of the Christian life, and its impelling, sustaining and comforting power. Presentation 04

  17. Stand Firm It is not too much to say that the whole gospel mystery of sanctification is summed up in the words ‘Become what you are’. Without the ‘indicatives’ of grace, the ‘imperatives’ are impossible; with them, all things are possible. This is how we must understand Paul’s words here. Paul in v15 is simply reminding the Thessalonians that there are good and honourable ‘traditions /teachings’ as well as bad ones. When he speaks in 1 Cor. 15 of delivering unto them that which he also received, he conveys the literal meaning of the word ‘tradition’ - something handed down from one to another. The ‘faith once delivered to the saints’ is a tradition that we not only may cherish and hold, but must, if the purity of the gospel is to be preserved. Presentation 04

  18. Stand Firm “We ourselves are bound to keep fast hold of all that connects us historically with the apostolic age. We would not lose a single thought, single like or dislike, a single conviction or instinct, of all that proves us the spiritual posterity of Peter and Paul and John. The Reformers were right.., in their claim to represent the true Church of Christ... and we will suffer for it if, in our eagerness for independence, we disown the riches of the past!” James Denny Paul’s final prayer for them in v16-17 is very significant. Presentation 04

  19. Stand Firm The emphasis on ‘The Lord Jesus Christ’ reminds us that holding fast to the traditions they have been taught was never to be merely a matter of their grasp and assimilation of salvation facts, but most of all a relationship to Christ. He, ultimately, and not merely the truth about him, is our Comforter and Stabiliser in the Christian life. Then, we see the point of the reference to God’s love. The phrase ‘by his grace gave us eternal encouragement and good hope’ refers to the past tense ‘who loved us’, and directs our thoughts to the Cross. The distinctive teaching about the Divine love in the N.T. is always in the past tense, not that God does not still love us - He does!- but that its focal point is always the Cross, where it was once for all manifested and given to us. Presentation 04

  20. Conclusion Such a love is both our encouragement [how could it be otherwise when it has gone deeper than the deepest human sorrow?] and our hope, for its final movement is the victory of the resurrection and consequently provides all that is needful for a strong and steadfast life and witness, promoting every good word and work. Note the skilful interplay of Divine power and human responsiveness in these last verses of the chapter. Salvation is all of God, yet all of God in such a way that human endeavour is never side-lined but on the contrary quickened and engaged to the full. We ‘work out our own salvation in fear and trembling, for it is God that works in us both to will and to do of His good pleasure’ [Phil. 2v12,13]. Presentation 04

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